Thoughtful readers and their parents will find this multi-layered story of mother/daughter tensions hauntingly real, and a great discussion book. Ever since her beautiful red-haired mother died of cancer four years ago, Carrie, 13, has been a "missing girl" to her own life, veritably sleepwalking through each day. She has a recurring dream: her mother sits at the kitchen table, alive but unsmiling and remote. When her new friend Mona offers to teach her about lucid dreaming--"being awake while being asleep"--she is powerfully attracted to the idea. Could she possibly talk to her mother in her dreams?
But Carrie can't bear to face her confused feelings about her mother's death, especially with her friends, who are loud about their dislike of their own mothers. So where can she find a dream she is willing to share? She has always resisted hearing her grandmother's stories of the Holocaust, but now she begins to listen avidly, and passes off the images of rats and terror from her grandmother's recollections as her own dreams which she describes to Mona.
As she hears these horror stories with fresh ears, her contempt for her immigrant grandmother turns to compassion, and Carrie comes to a fuller understanding of her mother's childhood. When she at last has a lucid dream, the dream-figure turns away from her daughter's attempts to communicate with an apologetic smile, making it possible for Carrie to accept that her mother no longer exists--and to wake up to her own life. --Patty Campbell, Amazon.com
Genre: Young Adult Fiction
But Carrie can't bear to face her confused feelings about her mother's death, especially with her friends, who are loud about their dislike of their own mothers. So where can she find a dream she is willing to share? She has always resisted hearing her grandmother's stories of the Holocaust, but now she begins to listen avidly, and passes off the images of rats and terror from her grandmother's recollections as her own dreams which she describes to Mona.
As she hears these horror stories with fresh ears, her contempt for her immigrant grandmother turns to compassion, and Carrie comes to a fuller understanding of her mother's childhood. When she at last has a lucid dream, the dream-figure turns away from her daughter's attempts to communicate with an apologetic smile, making it possible for Carrie to accept that her mother no longer exists--and to wake up to her own life. --Patty Campbell, Amazon.com
Genre: Young Adult Fiction
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Used availability for Lois Metzger's Missing Girls